A bit about my Citroen CX 2400 Prestige Cmatic

The Prestige has pieces of extra stainless trim

The backstory on the Citroen CX 2400 Prestige Cmatic is fairly interesting.

Of the CX models the Prestige is basically a factory standard extended length model, intended for executive and governmental use.  Initially extended 10 inches by sharing the station wagon chassis, the Prestige was a low volume model, often custom specified.

This particular car was ordered for the Belgian Congo’s government (then known as Zaire), an intended duty are that led to some interesting deletions and added options.

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Thinking Ahead – Resources of Various Sorts

Another post in the Thinking Ahead series started with https://k9zw.wordpress.com/2019/09/10/im-a-ham-or-am-i/

Consider avoiding consultative resources that are cliquey or dominated by aggressive personalities.  There are the usual ham orientated websites and blogs.

One additional source is a peer-contributed resource that is well worth checking out – https://survivalblog.com/ –  which is curated by a team led by a fellow Army Veteran who has penned numerous books on the topic.

On resource books, they tend to divide themselves into:

  • Military FM type and Military-Style “Manuals”
  • Manufacturers and Special Interest Group manuals, training courses, technical resources
  • Personal Accounts
  • Fiction with a Preparedness lesson
  • Subtopic Specific References
  • Book of Lists (data dump)

The Military style manuals are widely available in digital form, and usually not too hard to find in paper form.

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Latest Citroen CX Arrived

My latest Citroen CX arrived today (18 April 2024) transported by the ever friendly Applewood Motor Transport from Baltimore.

The car fortunately was disembarked and transported to climate controlled storage prior to the bridge disaster by a few days.

As our local weather was very threatening at delivery, I forgot to do pictures until after the new car was inside out of the weather.

Parked between the CX Athena and Pinzgauer waiting for Plates

This car is much like my first CX, which I drove all over W. Germany, France, and the small countries back in the 1980s. It is just a a better, longer, plusher version and driving it was deja vu to the max!

Cmatic is a semi-automatic transmission where the three speed box has an automatically controlled clutch AND also has a torque converter.  Sounds complicated but is rather instinctive to drive.  With the very low miles on this car, I’m hoping for the same trouble-free driving experience that the 100,000+ km I had when I drove my first Cmatic.

1978 CX 2400 Prestige Cmatic (and yes the Athena is that dusty)

This car has some nice features including a dual a/c system setup.

I am pretty excited about this car and will write up what I know about its history in another post.

73

Steve
K9ZW

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Giving the Station an Uplift

Dealer’s photo of the lift

Purchased a refurbished 60ft (18m) four wheel drive diesel boom lift with the idea of completing a series of projects at the home QTH, transporting it to the Island QTH to complete similar projects out there, and then selling it onwards.

The hope is that the net costs will be less than leasing a lift for a season, and the high-availability for a prolonged period helps me actually get the work done.

Some of the projects (more as a reminder-to-self):

Home QTH:

  • Antenna work with the Skyneedle at its lower level
  • Tree trimming (much to do here)
  • Putting up a large loop antenna
  • Installing a large dipole antenna
  • Repair of a small spot of woodpecker damage on the house
  • Removal of some unused/obsolete dish antennas from the house
  • Power washing the Workshop roofs

Island QTH:

  • Tower work, including mounting the T-8 and T-28 log periodics and cabling the tower
  • Minor Tree Trimming
  • Wasp Nest removal, general inspection, any repairs of the high parts of the Island house
  • Installing a large dipole antenna

Work QTH:

  • General Tower Servicing
  • Servicing Light-packs mounted high on buildings
  • Some minor Tree Trimming

I had been on the prowl for a suitable lift since before Covid, but hadn’t come up with a decent affordable unit.  Seems most used lifts are either mechanically very worn out or are too big & expensive. I had recently been offered a used 125ft lift (38m) for less money, but I have no need for such a beast.  This 60ft unit is actually at the larger end of my search parameters (45-60 ft) as it is.  The very big lifts require a semi lowboy setup to move, are very heavy and clumsy, and are expensive to inspect & maintain.

That I know the people who refurbish the 60ft lift, have the unit’s complete service history, learned that it was never a rental unit, and that I have great respect the work team whole took care of it throughout its first ownership.  All of the information helps a lot, especially when the actual lift looks so good.

Suddenly rather excited about every chore that requires a lift!

73

Steve
K9ZW

When the Power Goes Out – Short Outage Realities

Beginning of April 2024 Wisconsin was hit by a late in season Winter Storm.  Wet Heavy snow with lots of wind.

At the home QTH power was out briefly, but the new Kohler Genset kicked in, and we barely noticed with the smooth automatic switch over to Genset and later back to mains power.

Our Washington Island QTH was hit much harder by the storm, as on the Island wires came down in over 60 places, multiple poles snapped and the power to the island was cut because of heavy damage in the main Door peninsula.

Ours was mostly worry, and sudden lack of connectivity to our monitoring systems.  The home is left ticking-over at a lowered temperature, set to 55F (13c) as that temperature avoids setting off the alert systems and gives a couple day buffer if the power is out.

After two days the power did come back on, and here is what my sensor screen showed:

Sensor Screen after two day without power

We heat with a hot water boiler with backup electric baseboard heaters.

As the outside temperatures were around freezing, I was pleased that our temperature drop was fairly minimal.

When we come up during the winter it is a simple adjust the thermostats to normal, and put in a wood fire to bring this place up to temperatures.  (I have bought commercial grade IoT controllable thermostats but have yet to install them.)

When the power is out we lose the Canary monitoring system, as it would be impractical to battery backup each sensor unit.  We have a main Emerson House Minder setup that provides less data, but much better alerting capabilities including having a basement water-on-the-floor sensor.  The House Minder calls out when an alert condition occurs, so often it is the first notification we receive since Canary reneged on the originally included alert features.

The cameras still work:

Camera View

The stuff we worry about:

  • Temperature Drops – as if the home ends up below freezing long enough to freeze water pipes and/hot water heater parts, that could be very messy & costly.  Mitigation is we had the heating system filled with a glycol based solution that resists this issue as well as reduces corrosion inside the system.  If we were there the woodburner can easily heat the place.  As a local monitoring backup a large outdoor thermometer is visible from outside, being mounted on a stand I built so friends/authorities can check the temperature without going inside.
  • Freezers & Fridges thawing out is not a worry as we empty these and turn them off, when not in residence during the cold season.  If we were there and the power went out, it is several days before Fridges & Freezers warm up too much, and we’ve used the ice chest outside.
  • Water In & Out – this one is a problem when the power is out, as the well pump and the septic lift-pump simply require power.  The upside is that they don’t need to be powered up continuously.  The well pressure tank helps, as well as finding other water for non-potable uses like flushing toilets.  The lift-pump comes on when the separation chambers fill up enough, so we would have some considerable time with that pump off.
  • Sump Pump – here is a troublesome concern, as our home has a full basement, which is not universal on the island because of the high bedrock situation.  So we monitor for pump failure with the House Minder water on the basement floor sensor, and a couple seasons back changed our rather new sump pump for a double-pump/one-hole setup where the lower (first to run) pump is 110vac and the slightly higher pump is a 12vdc version running from a deep cell marine type battery kept on a managed charger.  The nearly new pump that was pulled out is there ready to drop in as a pump replacement and I have a “trash pump” with enough hose to provide another backup option.  Anything water-sensitive is either up on blocks or was swapped out for outdoor rated materials, up to about a 12 inch (30cm) from the basement floor, reducing the risk of losses.
  • Radios – while the home QTH is setup to transition over to Genset power, the island QTH is power dependent if it is left on.  For the most part I never leave it on when we are off island, as the present internet sucks.  Eventually we will get the new fiber and at that stage I will need to power-harden the station to allow for remote operations.

Some action items are additional battery backups at the home QTH, completion of installation of the remote thermostats at the island, changing the island sump pump battery this autumn based on battery age, and consideration of a limited amount of battery backup at the island.

Our island power came back on about 60 hours after going out and the temperature drop from no heat was about 5 to 8F (3 to 4c) which was within my predicted loss expectations.

73

Steve
K9ZW

Kobold Letters – HTML Transformer Emails

HTML emails can be a serious security risk.

Simple version of the risk is that using the style-setting CSS feature of HTML email, completely different content can be substituted in various email viewing situations. The differning presentations can be used for phishing and other ill-intended games.

More technical explanation:

https://lutrasecurity.com/en/articles/kobold-letters/

What is Kobold?

Kobold https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobold

Basically Kobold is “mischief with a mind of its own.”

What does this mean for Hams?

That yet another way for external actors to get inside your systems exists, and one that you might not reasonably have much control over.

The late Steve Uhrig WA2SWS of SWS Security told me decades ago to only exchange plain text emails.  WA2SWS consulted to Tom Clancy on security matters and appeared in the movie “Enemy of the State” along with layers of less visible security work on contract, military and national interest basises.  Back then he had already realized that emails could be exploited to carry unexpected payloads.

As few of us are really going to revert to plain-text emails, keeping our protective systems and our awareness peaked might be the best response to this ongoing threat.

Other ideas?

73

Steve
K9ZW

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